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JD Vance once said conspiracy theories were idiotic. As Trump's VP pick he is embracing them

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 JD Vance not long ago described conspiracy theories as the feverish imaginings produced by 鈥渇ringe lunatics writing about all manner of idiocy.鈥 That was before he became a rising star in Republican politics.
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Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, arrives with his wife Usha Vance, before speaking at a campaign event, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024 in Eau Claire, Wis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 JD Vance not long ago described conspiracy theories as the feverish imaginings produced by 鈥渇ringe lunatics writing about all manner of idiocy.鈥

That was before he became a rising star in Republican politics.

The Ohio senator and has in recent years declared that the federal government deliberately allowed fentanyl into the United States to kill conservative and rural voters. He has praised , a well-known conspiracy theorist who claimed in the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting was a hoax.

And he鈥檚 echoed 鈥 contrary to all evidence 鈥 former President Donald Trump's assertion that the 2020 election was unfairly won by Democrats and that those charged in the subsequent Capitol insurrection are 鈥減olitical prisoners.鈥 More recently, he gave credence to the that Haitian immigrants were in Ohio.

Longtime Republican strategists and academics say Vance's evolution on the conspiracy theories can be traced to the Ohio politician's desire to advance in Trump's Republican Party. The former president has a long history of pushing unfounded claims. He lied about former President Barack Obama having been , and about doctors performing ." He has said that wind turbines cause cancer. And he has social media posts that elections cannot be trusted.

Reinvented himself

Vance has "entirely reinvented himself,鈥 said Joseph Uscinski, a University of Miami professor and expert on the history of conspiracy theories. 鈥淚t鈥檚 advantageous now because of what Trump has done to the GOP. It probably would not have worked, you know, 20, 30 years ago. He would have been seen as a kook. But now given what Trump has done to the GOP, this is sort of par for the course.鈥

Denying is not a recipe for electoral success.

Mike Pence and Liz Cheney are examples of what can happen to those who refuse to embrace such ideas. Pence, Trump's former vice president, refused to go along with the scheme to overturn the 2020 election, ensuring his run in the 2024 GOP presidential primary went nowhere. Former Rep. Cheney came under assault from Trump and his allies after she helped lead the House investigation into his role in the insurrection. She was stripped of her leadership role in Congress and lost her House seat to a Trump-endorsed candidate in the Republican primary.

A spokesperson for Vance's campaign said that while the candidate stands by many of his claims 鈥 including the idea that 鈥 others have been misrepresented by Democrats.

Vance suggested recently that he is comfortable sharing unfounded claims if they draw attention to an issue.

鈥淚f I have to create stories so that the American media actually pays attention to the suffering of the American people, then that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 going to do,鈥 he said Sunday on CNN.

Later in the same interview he said his claims about abducted pets had helped to 鈥渇ocus鈥 the media鈥檚 attention on immigration.

From intellectual to conspiracy theorist

Vance, 40, found early success and fame as the writer of 鈥淗illbilly Elegy,鈥 his best-selling 2016 memoir that examined the plight of rural America.

Besides labeling conspiracy theorists as 鈥渇ringe lunatics鈥 in the book, Vance wrote that their beliefs were popular, in part, because people had lost faith in the media. 鈥淲ith little trust in the press, there鈥檚 no check on the Internet conspiracy theories that rule the digital world.鈥

Before he wrote the book, Vance expressed similar insights to friends.

Cullen Tiernan served in the U.S. Marines with Vance when they were deployed to Iraq in 2005 and 2006. Tiernan said Vance routinely rejected conspiracy theories that came up in discussions, including one that alleged the U.S. government had actually been behind the Sept. 11, 2001, attack.

Vance 鈥渏ust didn鈥檛 have time for it,鈥 said Tiernan, who remains a close friend of the senator.

A review of Vance鈥檚 published works and speeches shows he first began diving into the conspiracy pool after announcing his candidacy in 2021 for an open U.S. Senate seat in Ohio.

He defended , , in a 2021 speech, saying that 鈥渂elieving crazy things is not the mark of whether somebody should be rejected.鈥

A spokesperson for Vance's campaign told the AP that the candidate doesn't agree with Jones when it comes to the Sandy Hook massacre, before comparing that conspiracy theory to Democratic concerns about in 2016.

The senator has also repeatedly questioned the seriousness of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and dismissed the threats on Pence's life 鈥 rioters were searching for the vice president in the Capitol, chanting, 鈥淗ang Mike Pence!鈥

He said the 鈥渞eal assault on democracy鈥 wasn't Jan. 6 鈥 but the fact that people charged in the riot were still locked up.

鈥滻t is an insult to all of us that so many people are rotting in prison without being offered a speedy trial. These people are political prisoners," he on social media in 2022.

And he wrote a favorable blurb for a book that came out in July by Jack Posobiec, a political operative who is perhaps best known for promoting the 鈥 鈥 conspiracy that alleged Democrats were pedophiles who were hiding abducted children in pizza parlors.

Echoing Great Replacement Theory

Vance has also invoked George Soros, one of the far right鈥檚 favorite bogeymen.

Soros, the Jewish financier and Democratic megadonor, is such a ubiquitous target in some conservative circles that it can obscure the longstanding antisemitic tropes mirrored in language used to describe him: of rich Jewish bankers secretly controlling the world, wealthy Jewish puppet masters pulling the strings of those in power.

In December 2021, Vance said Soros 鈥 鈥 for helping Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner get into office. 鈥淕eorge Soros put millions into Krasner鈥檚 campaigns, which promised to go easy on the types of criminals who commit these murders," .

Vance has promoted the 鈥済reat replacement theory,鈥 which claims that Democrats are trying to use immigrants to replace white Americans in a bid to control the nation. Rooted in anti-Semitism and racism, many adherents to the theory claim the scheme is being orchestrated by powerful Jews like Soros, along with other

鈥淲e have an invasion in this country because very powerful people get richer and more powerful because of it,鈥 Vance said on Fox News in 2022.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not bad policy," Vance added, 鈥渋t鈥檚 evil.鈥

Vance鈥檚 campaign rejects suggestions that he engages in anti-Semitic or anti-immigrant rhetoric. It notes the candidate has three biracial children with his wife, the daughter of immigrants from India. The campaign also says Democrats have talked about how immigration could help their party鈥檚 electoral chances.

鈥淢any leading Democrats have gleefully exclaimed, in public, that changing demographics would lead to an increase in political power for their side,鈥 the campaign said.

By attacking Soros and promoting the great replacement theory, however, Vance is flirting with dangerous rhetoric that has touched off violence in the past, said Amy Spitalnick, CEO of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs.

Not long ago, major party candidates would have rejected such theories, if only out of fear that voters would see them as racist or anti-Semitic. That is no longer the case, Spitalnick said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 becoming increasingly normalized and increasingly mainstreamed,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not accidental, and it鈥檚 incredibly dangerous."

Aaron Kessler, David Klepper And Trenton Daniel, The Associated Press

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